A little more substantially, imo, for logic to apply to life, it must always pass the reality test. — tim wood
A considerable expansion of the topic. — tim wood
it may be inferred that he wants can and want to be sufficient for his conclusion. If so then that ought to be a premise. — tim wood
It's not what you or I think, but what the argument says. — tim wood
you're a little bit more charitable and generous in your reading the OP — tim wood
might be something in between — jorndoe
Your logic only applies to a single mind, such as God. — unenlightened
I can stop my crack habit — unenlightened
one can want things that conflict — unenlightened
God — unenlightened
"If...then..." does not always operate as you might expect. "If p, then q" entails "if not-q, then not-p". But e.g. suppose if you want an eclaire (p), then you can eat one (q). However it does not follow that, if you don't want an eclaire (not-q), then you cannot eat one (not-p). — Cuthbert
Your logic only applies to a single mind, such as God. — unenlightened
Yes, I think it likely jorndoe is talking about God — bert1
1) For certain believers, this is a problem they go to great lengths to explain any which way they can. Question: why does it need explaining? — tim wood
The underlying problem concerns equating suffering with evil - at a human level justified, imo. But if God is, and it's all his, suffering and all, then, for certain believers, calling it evil must be a heresy because it presupposes knowledge of the mind and intentions of God, even assumes those are God-capacities.
The human logic of this is inescapable. That is not to say human logic trumps or is superior to divine logic, only that any claim to know divine logic is laughable or contemptible, inevitably the latter. . — tim wood
Since 4 is false or so we believe, there is suffering/evil, — TheMadFool
The thread took a turn — jorndoe
If we cannot say that relief from cancer is good, then we have nothing. (Martinez, StJude) — jorndoe
So, with the cancer example, if we suppose it's for an unknown greater good, then the right thing would be not doing anything about it.
There seem to be weird absurdities along this line of inquiry, which makes me think it started out wrong. — jorndoe
Credo quia absurdum — Tertullian
The meaning of the phrase (above) may relate to 1 Corinthians 1:17–31, where something foolish to a human may be a part of God's wisdom — Wikipedia
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